Transformable Modular Robots: A CPG-Based Approach to Independent and Collective Locomotion
Jiayu Ding, Rohit Jakkula, Tom Xiao, Zhenyu Gan
- Year
- 2025
- Access
- Open access
Abstract
Modular robotics enables the development of versatile and adaptive robotic systems with autonomous reconfiguration. This paper presents a modular robotic system in which each module has independent actuation, battery power, and control, allowing both individual mobility and coordinated locomotion. A hierarchical Central Pattern Generator (CPG) framework governs motion, with a low-level CPG controlling individual modules and a high-level CPG synchronizing inter-module coordination, enabling smooth transitions between independent and collective behaviors. To validate the system, we conduct simulations in MuJoCo and hardware experiments, evaluating locomotion across different configurations. We first analyze single-module motion, followed by two-module cooperative locomotion. Results demonstrate the effectiveness of the CPG-based control framework in achieving robust, flexible, and scalable locomotion. The proposed modular architecture has potential applications in search and rescue, environmental monitoring, and autonomous exploration, where adaptability and reconfigurability are essential.
Keywords
Related papers
Trajectory tracking control for 6WID/4WIS UGV via nonlinear sliding mode-model predictive control with adaptive following steering and dynamic-static constraints
Shengyang Lu, Guanpeng Chen, Lijing Zhao +2 more
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026
Bioinspired underwater robotics: Advances across the materials, design, control, and applications
Dilip Muchhala, Pramod Kumar Maurya, Adarsh Raut +3 more
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026
Modeling and control of a rigid–soft hybrid-link humanoid robot
Zewen He, Taiki Ishigaki, Ko Yamamoto
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026
Artificial pushing adaptive coordinated control for the human-exoskeleton-walker system
Xinhao Zhang, Chen Yang, Chaobin Zou +4 more
Robotics and Autonomous Systems · 2026